A Christian is one who stops working to be saved, not one who stops working!
It is no more narrow to claim that one religion is right than to claim that one way to think about all religions is right.
The gospel has two parts. It has the part that says you’re a sinner, and it has the part that says you’re loved and accepted.
If you come to recognize the beliefs on which your doubts about Christianity are based, and if you seek as much proof for those beliefs as you seek from Christians for theirs – you will discover that your doubts are not as solid as they first appeared.
People only get in the afterlife what they have most wanted-either to have God as Savior and Master or to be their own Saviors and Masters.
To truly become Christians we must also repent of the reasons we ever did anything right.
Faith in God’s promises means not always following the expected, rational path.
Just because we don’t see a reason for evil and suffering doesn’t mean there’s not a reason for it.
When pain and suffering come upon us, we finally see not only that we are not in control of our lives but that we never were.
We are free to fight sin, and free to win; but we must still fight.
What you do in secret tells you who your God is.
You don’t fall in love. You commit to it.
God has become human. The absolute has become particular. The ideal has become real. The divine has taken up a human nature.
No one is too bad for Jesus. A lot of people think they are too good for Jesus.
The Gospel worldview equips the artist with a unique combination of optimism and realism about life.
Christianity is not just for the strong; it’s for everyone.
If God is not at the center of your life, something else is.
Truth is more important, freedom is more complex, and Jesus is more liberating than you think.
The future is already won, and the more hostile the culture, the easier it is to communicate the difference of Christianity.
The human race doesn’t need more books telling them what to do. They need the power to do what they already know.